GROUNDING

ORGANIZED BY LYDIA CHESHEWALLA AND SARAH ROWE
JULY 8TH - AUGUST 19TH, 2022


“This is the place that holds me. This is the place that holds my ancestors. This is the place that will hold my children. This place is me. I am this place too.”
–Lydia Cheshewalla

 

GROUNDING, organized by Lydia Cheshewalla and Sarah Rowe, explores reciprocal human and more-than-human kinship systems through acts of somatic co-regulation with place, land, and earth. Introducing ethically sourced soil pigments into the gallery space as a medium to produce body-prints on site, these two artists make visible the often-invisible interdependencies of Indigenous bodies and complex ecosystems. By positing land as body and earth as archive, the exhibition considers soil’s capacity to record the body’s impressions as part of an ancestral lineage of understanding what it means to be in, of, or from a place.

Generator Grant programming is presented with support from the Nebraska Arts Council and the Nebraska Cultural Endowment.

 

Installation Images

Photos: Debra S. Kaplan

 
 

About the Artists

Sarah Rowe and Lydia Cheshewalla are from Plains Nations that overlap.They share a kinship through their respective Lakota and Dakota lineages, and Ponca and Osage Nations. In GROUNDING, they speak to the shared experience of forced removal across distances that articulate the imposed binary of "urban" vs "rural" Indigeneity. 

Lydia Cheshewalla is a transdisciplinary artist from Oklahoma, living and working in motion throughout the ecological landscape of the Great Plains. As an Osage woman, her work primarily focuses on community, emotional awareness, environmental justice, ephemerality, kinship, and art as healing action. She is currently working on becoming.

Sarah Rowe is an interdisciplinary artist based in Omaha, NE. Her work opens cross cultural dialogues by utilizing methods of painting, casting, fiber arts, performance, and Native American ceremony in unconventional ways. Rowe’s work is participatory, a call to action, and re-imagines traditional Native American symbology to fit the narrative of today’s global landscape. Rowe holds a BA in Studio Art from Webster University, studying in St. Louis, MO, and Vienna, Austria. She is of Lakota and Ponca descent.